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Age-related arterial stiffness is a common complaint of growing older, and a contributing factor to age-related erectile dysfunction.

In 2011, Dr. Van Laecke and his team at the Ghent University Hospital in Belgium examined the impact of low magnesium on age-related arterial stiffness in a study of 512 men (source).

Over the course of six years, the team examined over 10 factors that could impact arterial stiffness. Some of the other factors included age, diabetes and smoking status, body weight, blood pressure, and various hormone levels.

Van Laecke concluded that low magnesium levels correlated strongly with levels of arterial stiffness, enough to stand out from the crowd of other factors. They declared low magnesium an “independent predictor” of arterial stiffness.

They also found this impact was strongest in patients over 55 years old.

Bottom line: there’s no guarantee that extra magnesium will fix your ED. But if you have low magnesium, getting it back to normal levels can fix this particular cause of erectile dysfunction.

Magnesium Regulates Blood Pressure

Like I said about arterial stiffness, problems with blood pressure can have a powerful impact on erectile health.

The studies Song look at examined over 2,000 patients total. All used double-blind, placebo-controlled methodology. They lasted 3 weeks to 6 months, and used varied dosages from 240 mg to 960 mg daily.

Song’s findings were conclusive. Universally, the studies found a “causative effect” between taking magnesium supplements and reducing symptoms of hypertension when taken in dosage of 300 mg per day or higher.

This study demonstrated magnesium supplements, or even a diet rich in magnesium, can replace expensive and risky hypertension medications as a cure for or preventer of high blood pressure.

This is a bigger deal than you might be thinking right now…

Remember: Viagra started out as a blood pressure medication. If you can get some of the benefits of Viagra without the side effects and without shelling out big money to big pharma, that’s a huge win.

Magnesium Blocks Calcification of Arteries

As we age, microscopic amounts of plaque get left on the insides of our arteries.

This plaque accumulates and hardens as the decades go on andcan cause circulatory problems from erectile dysfunction up to and including heart failure.

In 2014, a team of five doctors from Massachusetts General Hospital and Tufts University conducted a study on magnesium and arterial calcification, finding that even 50 mg daily of magnesium intake was enough to reduce calcification by nearly 25 percent (source).

Their results were checked and adjusted for factors like age, gender, weight and smoking, and remained consistent across subjects. Ultimately, the team identified magnesium as a protective agent against stroke and coronary heart disease.

It’s also worth noting that calcified arteries happen faster if you smoke, eat an unhealthy diet or develop diabetes. Since all three of these also can cause or exacerbate erectile dysfunction, this is another reason to take better care of your body in general.

Magnesium Boosts Testosterone

Most of the factors I’ve discussed so far have to do with blood flow. This matters because blood is such a huge part of the physical process of having and maintaining a strong erection. But one other function of magnesium addresses an entirely different cause of erectile dysfunction.

A wide range of studies have linked magnesium with increased testosterone. Here are a few of the more powerful examples:

A 2008 study in France found that magnesium freed testosterone bound by SHBG, allowing more produced testosterone to be used by the subjects’ bodies.

In Parma, Italy, a 2011 study of over 400 older men found a strong correlation between higher testosterone levels and higher levels of blood serum magnesium (source).

Research in 2011 in Karaman, Turkey tested a combination of magnesium supplementation and intense martial arts training. The result after six weeks was a 24% increase in free testosterone.

A 2012 study in Philadelphia studied boys with Gitelman’s syndrome. The syndrome causes problems with magnesium and calcium levels. The study found that these problems caused delayed puberty, due to lower testosterone levels caused by the magnesium imbalance.